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Ines Weizman: The Architectural Casino

Ines Weizman

The Architectural Casino
Conversations about Modernism in Haifa

Softcover, 224 pages

Date of publication: 17.09.2025

Haifa’s architectural modernism

After the First World War and under the British Mandate, Haifa grew from a small Ottoman port town into a regional metropolis and industrial centre around a deep seaport. The city was part of an open space that extended from Cairo to Damascus through Beirut, in a region where Syria, Palestine and Lebanon were part of the same fluid, interconnected space. During the Second World War, Haifa became a border town. Under French Vichy, the border between Lebanon and Syria ran sixty kilometres to the north and hardened only after the creation of Israel in 1948 and the wars with Lebanon. Haifa’s architectural modernism developed in relation to the city’s geopolitical environment. No building better manifests Haifa’s predicament than the modernist casino building, built in the city’s Bat Galim seafront district.

  • memory
  • history of architecture
  • Israel
  • Middle East

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Ines Weizman

born in Leipzig, Germany, is the Head of PhD Programme at the School of Architecture, Royal College of Art in London. Since 2022 she is also Professor of Architectural Theory and Design at the Academy of Fine Arts, Institute for Art and Architecture in Vienna. She is the founding director of the Centre for Documentary Architecture (CDA), an interdisciplinary research collective of architectural historians, filmmakers, and digital technologists. Among her most recent publications are Dust&Data: Traces of the Bauhaus across 100 Years (2019), Documentary Architecture/ Dissidence through Architecture (2020). In 2023 she was the commissioner of the Lithuanian Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale where she also presented an installation on Joséphine Baker and Modern Architecture across the Colonised Arab World. Her most recent book Joséphine Baker across the Colonial Modern will be published in 2024.
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